English Language & Usage Asked on May 14, 2021
But it is just two lovers, holding hands and in a hurry to reach their car, their locked hands a starfish leaping through the dark.
A sentence by John Updike.
I’ve never seen a lot of sentences like this pattern. It (the bold part) looks like a phrase, a free modifier.
When I try to split the Phrase there I got two noun phrases- their locked hands and a starfish.
I think I can just write – Their locked hands a starfish
Their locked hands leaping through the dark is the common syntax of the phrase (often named absolute phrase) I’ve encountered in books.
How is it possible to construct a phrase with a noun equating to another in the same structure?
Can I just write My hands a starfish?
But it is just two lovers, walking towards their car, their hands a starfish, their black car a nimbus at night.
Why don’t I see a lot of such sentences in literature?
What such a construction is called? ?
Finally..
Is there any special equation to make such absolute or embed constructions?
(I’m not a native English Speaker)
The believe the structure you bolded contains what is known as an appositive. An appositive is essentially a noun phrase that modifies another consecutive noun phrase. In your case, "a starfish leaping through the dark" is the appositive while "their locked hands" is the noun being modified.
The entire bolded structure is a phrase as it contains no main verb, and so "My hands a starfish" would not be considered a complete sentence.
Answered by General Poxter on May 14, 2021
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